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Our economy needs you, says Madonsela

Cape Town - Public Protector Thuli Madonsela has asked commerce graduates of the University of Cape Town to consider the public sector as a potential future employer and to be part of problem solving in the country.

She was delivering a commencement address at the university's School of Business in Cape Town on Friday.

Madonsela told graduates that the public sector needed innovative brains to help government deliver on the constitutional promise of a better life for all.

"While it is well and good to be in the private sector, do consider the public sector as government needs your innovative brains to provide solutions to the problems that have given rise to the economic challenges we are experiencing," she said.

She added that young professionals often tended to shun the public sector in favour of the corporate world and were quick to point fingers when things were not going right in government.

She cautioned that pointing fingers at the government was not doing the country any good when the critics could be offering solutions from within.

"Often young professionals tend to shun the public sector, opting for the corporate world. There is nothing wrong with this. However, there is something wrong when we then blame the government when our economy battles to keep afloat," she said.

Bleak economic forecast

Pointing to the forecast bleak economic outlook, she told the former students that they were graduating at the time when the country's economy was struggling to create jobs and grappling with a lengthy industrial action in the platinum belt, among other things.

The World Bank, this week revised South Africa's growth forecast from an earlier forecast of 2.7 % to 2%.

"This is where you come in. The industries in which you will soon be plying your trade form part of the bedrock of our economy. Your country needs your brains more than ever before to come up with innovative solutions to our economic problems," she said.

Good example

She gave graduates an example of Ludwick Marishane, a graduate from the same university, who put the country on the world map through his invention of a hygienic product that needed no water to use, but left users refreshed. The invention earned him a Global Student Entrepreneur Award.

She told the graduates they had what it takes to make a meaningful contribution to the world and warned them that they were about to transverse an uneasy terrain.

Advising them to stay on cause, she used late President Nelson Mandela's words in saying "after climbing a great hill, one only finds that there are many more hills to climb." And that "It always seems impossible until it is done".

She reminded graduates that they came from different backgrounds but were graduating together as equals.

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